Associated Press
WASHINGTON (AP) — Average premiums
for individually purchased health insurance will grow around 15 percent next
year, largely because of marketplace nervousness over whether President Donald
Trump will block federal subsidies to insurers, Congress' nonpartisan fiscal
analyst projected Thursday.
The Congressional Budget Office
estimate comes as Trump has repeatedly threatened to halt the payments in his
drive to dismember President Barack Obama's health care law.
The agency said 2018 premiums will
grow "largely because of short-term market uncertainty — in particular,
insurers' uncertainty about whether federal funding for certain subsidies that
are currently available will continue to be provided."
It also attributed the projected
increase to growing numbers of people living in regions where only one insurer
sells policies, therefore facing less competition.
Obama's law requires insurers to
reduce out-of-pocket costs like deductibles for lower-earning customers, and
mandates that the government reimburse the companies. It costs the government
about $7 billion annually.
A federal court has ruled Congress
didn't authorize the expenditures, but the subsidies have until now continued.
White House spokesman Ninio Fetalvo
accused the budget office of issuing analyses that "have been off base for
years."
Fetalvo said while the administration
considers whether to continue the payments, "real reform which lowers
costs and expands choices will only come from repealing and replacing
Obamacare."
The budget agency has a sterling
reputation with most objective, outside fiscal experts. The GOP effort to erase
Obama's law failed in the Senate in July, and a renewed effort by some
Republican senators to scuttle the law is considered unlikely to succeed.
Continuing the federal subsidies
"remains essential to the stability of the individual market," said
Kristine Grow, a spokeswoman for America's Health Insurance Plans, that
industry's largest trade group.
The budget office and insurance
industry had previously projected that 2018 premiums would grow an average 20
percent if Trump actually halts the subsidies.
Sens. Lamar Alexander, R-Tenn., and
Patty Murray, D-Wash., have been trying to craft an agreement continuing the
payments for at least a year. In exchange, Alexander wants Democrats to make it
easier for states to relax the Obama law's coverage requirements, which
Democrats are resisting.
The report said it expects the 10
million Americans buying coverage on government-operated insurance exchanges
this year to grow to 11 million in 2018.
But it said that increase would be
constrained by rising premiums plus steps the Trump administration has taken,
such as cutting outreach programs that publicize the exchanges and reducing the
previous 90-day enrollment period to 45 days.
Of the 10 million people buying
coverage on insurance exchanges, 8 million qualify for federal premium
subsidies. Those subsidies rise automatically with premiums, so those customers
would largely be protected as premiums grow.
But 2 million people buying coverage
on exchanges who don't get those subsidies, and 6 million others buying
individual policies on their own outside the marketplaces, would not be
shielded from growing premiums.
More than half of Americans get
medical coverage from their employers.
AP reporter Jill Colvin contributed
to this report.
https://insurancenewsnet.com/oarticle/analysts-see-trump-threats-to-insurers-boosting-premiums#.WbvhBVVuJhF
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